Case Study 6 Flashcards

1
Q

A 72 year old male smoker with no previous cardiac history presents to GP with progressive dyspnoea, worsening over a few months.
On examination:
- regular pulse
- normal BP of 130/80
- no evidence of cardiac failure
- systolic murmur maximal on expiration
Give three likely causes of the systolic murmur

A
  • aortic sclerosis
  • aortic stenosis
  • mitral regurgitation
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2
Q

For the possible causes of the murmur, give findings on examination which may help you to identify the cause for his murmur

A
  • Aortic sclerosis - does not radiate to carotids
  • Aortic stenosis - may be associated with slow rising upstroke in the pulse waveform, low output pulse and murmur radiating to carotids
  • Mitral regurgitation - loudest at apex, radiates to axilla, pan systolic murmur, maximal on expiration
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3
Q

Give three basic investigations that should be carried out in primary care prior to hospital referral

A
  • FBC
  • biochemical screen including thyroid function
  • CXR
  • ECG
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4
Q

The GP finds nothing wrong in his initial investigation and refers the patient to his local cardiology clinic. What key outpatient investigation should subsequently be performed?

A

Echocardiogram

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5
Q

Severe aortic stenosis is diagnosed with a gradient across the valve estimated to be approximately 80mmHg with good left ventricular function. Coronary angiography is subsequently found to be normal. What is the recommended treatment for his condition?

A

Surgical aortic valve replacement

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